980 resultados para Fresh-frozen allogeneic bone


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Enxertos ósseos homólogos congelados têm sido documentados apresentando bons resultados clínicos como substituto ao material autógeno nas reconstruções alveolares. Entretanto, dados referentes à incorporação e remodelação destes enxertos não estão disponíveis na literatura. Este estudo tem por objetivo determinar um período ótimo de espera para instalação de implantes em rebordos reconstruídos com enxertos ósseos homólogos em bloco no que se refere à incorporação e reabsorção. 24 pacientes foram submetidos à reconstrução alveolar óssea homóloga previamente à instalação de implantes. Os indivíduos foram alocados randomicamente em um de 3 grupos de acordo com o tempo de espera para o segundo estágio cirúrgico (4, 6 e 8 meses). Análises tomográficas, histológicas e histomorfométricas foram utilizadas a fim de determinar o grau de reabsorção e incorporação dos enxertos nos diferentes intervalos de tempo para cada grupo. Os dados de reabsorção sofrida pelos enxertos demonstraram diferenças estatisticamente significativas para os três intervalos de espera. Da mesma forma, parâmetros histomorfométricos como contagem de osteócitos e quantificação de remanescentes de osso homólogo nas biópsias apresentaram diferenças significativas entre os grupos. De acordo com os dados do presente trabalho, no que diz respeito à remodelação e incorporação, o período mais favorável à instalação dos implantes a curto prazo após recontruções com enxertos homólogos é de 4 meses.

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Microbiological investigation of fresh and frozen fishes such as pomfret, surmai and mackerel was carried out under various conditions of preservation. Glazing, block-freezing and preservation in gunny bag were affected. Determination of bacterial load and isolation, identification and classification of the resistant bacteria were made. Spore-formers of Subtilis mesentericus group were found to be resistant to freezing as well as glazing by ascorbic acid, citric acid and sodium nitrite except a mixture of sodium chloride and glucose. Bacterial load was reduced to a good extent and maintained low till the end of frozen storage period.

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Present limit of faecal streptococci as 100/g in fresh frozen shrimp was found to be too strict a standard commercially prepared products. Statistical analysis of the data collected indicates that fixing the maximum permissible limit as 1000/g will be a more workable proposition.

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Background: It is known that 20-30% of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) is used in intensive care units (ICUs), but little is known about variations in decision making between clinicians in relation to coagulopathy management. Our aim was to describe ICU clinicians' beliefs and practice in relation to FFP treatment of non-bleeding coagulopathic critically ill patients.

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Allogeneic blood or bone marrow transplantation is a successful treatment for leukaemia and severe aplastic anaemia (SAA). Graft rejection following transplantation for leukaemia is a rare event but leukaemic relapse may occur at varying rates, depending upon the stage of leukaemia at which the transplant was undertaken and the type of leukaemia. Relapse is generally assumed to occur in residual host cells, which are refractory to, or escape from the myeloablative conditioning therapy. Rare cases have been described, however, in which the leukaemia recurs in cells of donor origin. Lack of a successful outcome of blood or bone marrow transplantation for severe aplastic anaemia (SAA), however, is due to late graft rejection or graft-versus-host disease. Leukaemia in cells of donor origin has rarely been reported in patients following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for SAA. This report describes leukaemic transformation in donor cells following a second allogeneic BMT for severe aplastic anaemia. PCR of short tandem repeats in bone marrow aspirates and in colonies derived from BFUE and CFU-GM indicated the donor origin of leukaemia. Donor leukaemia is a rare event following transplantation for severe aplastic anaemia but may represent the persistence or perturbation of a stromal defect in these patients inducing leukaemic change in donor haemopoietic stem cells.

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Acute leukaemias in relapse after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) respond poorly to donor leucocyte infusions (DLI) compared with chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML), at least in part because of faster disease kinetics. Fludarabine-containing 'non-myeloablative' chemotherapy followed by further allo SCT may offer more rapid and effective disease control. We report 14 patients with relapse after allo SCT for acute leukaemia [seven acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), five acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL)] or refractory anaemia with excess blasts in transformation (RAEB-t, n = 2) treated with fludarabine, high-dose cytosine arabinoside (ara-C) and granulocyte colony-simulating factor (G-CSF) with (n = 10) or without (n = 2) idarubicin (FLAG +/- Ida) or DaunoXome (FLAG-X) (n = 2) and second allo SCT from the original donor. Donors were fully human leucocyte antigen (HLA) -matched in 13 cases with a single class A mismatch in one. Actuarial overall survival was 60% and disease-free survival was 26% at 58 months. Remissions after the second SCT were longer than those after the first bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in eight of the 13 assessable patients to date. Haematopoietic recovery was rapid. Transplants were well tolerated with no treatment-related deaths. The major complication was graft-versus-host disease (GvHD, acute >/= grade II-2 cases, chronic - eight cases, two limited, six extensive) although there have been no deaths attributable to this. FLAG +/- Ida and second allo SCT is a safe and useful approach and may be more effective than DLI in the treatment of acute leukaemias relapsing after conventional allo SCT.

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Immune haemolytic anaemia (IHA) is a recognised complication after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) and occurs more frequently if marrow cells have been subjected to T cell depletion (TCD). Among 58 consecutive patients who underwent TCD-allogeneic SCT from volunteer unrelated donors for the treatment of CML at the Hammersmith Hospital during a 3-year period (1 March 1996 to 28 February 1999) we identified nine cases of IHA. All patients had a strongly positive direct and indirect antiglobulin test and in eight patients the serological findings were typical of warm-type haemolysis often with antibody specificities within the Rh system. All nine cases had clinically significant haemolysis and were treated initially with prednisolone and immunoglobulin. The onset of IHA coincided with the occurrence of leukaemic relapse in six cases, and the presence of host haemopoiesis confirmed by lineage-specific chimerism in all four cases studied. Five patients received donor lymphocyte infusions (DLI); in three molecular remission and the restoration of full donor chimerism coincided with resolution of haemolysis. We conclude that in the context of leukaemic relapse, DLI is an effective therapy for IHA following allografts involving TCD.

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A randomized trial was carried out comparing cyclosporin A (CsA) and short-term methotrexate (MTX) versus CsA alone for graft versus host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis in patients with severe aplastic anemia (SAA) undergoing allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from a compatible sibling. Seventy-one patients (median age, 19 years; range, 4-46 years) were randomized to receive either CsA and MTX or CsA alone for the first 3 weeks after BMT. Subsequently, both groups received CsA orally, with gradual drug reduction until discontinuation 8 to 12 months after BMT. Patients randomized in both arms had comparable characteristics and received the same preparative regimen (ie, cyclophosphamide 200 mg/kg over 4 days). The median time for neutrophil engraftment was 17 days (range, 11-31 days) and 12 days (range, 4-45 days) for patients in the CsA/MTX group and the CsA alone group, respectively (P =.01). No significant difference was observed in the probability of either grade 2, grade 3, or grade 4 acute GVHD or chronic GVHD developing in the 2 groups. The Kaplan-Meier estimates of 1-year transplantation-related mortality rates for patients given either CsA/MTX or CsA alone were 3% and 15%, respectively (P =.07). With a median follow-up of 48 months from BMT, the 5-year survival probability is 94% for patients in the CsA/MTX group and 78% for those in the CsA alone group (P =. 05). These data indicate that the use of CsA with MTX is associated with improved survival in patients with SAA who receive transplants from compatible siblings. (Blood. 2000;96:1690-1697)

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Ultraviolet-B (UVB) irradiation is known to inhibit lymphocyte activity and consequently to reduce the incidence of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in experimental models for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). GVHD is frequently associated with morbidity and mortality, but also with the beneficial graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect, demonstrated by a reduction in the incidence of leukemia relapse. In this study, we investigated whether UVB treatment of allogeneic T cells could prevent GVHD while sparing the beneficial GVL effect following allogeneic BMT in the Brown Norway myelocytic leukemia (BNML) rat model analogous to human acute myelocytic leukemia (AML). The dose of UVB required to abolish lethal GVHD in the rat allogeneic BMT model (WAG/Rij donors into BN recipients) was 4000 J/m2. However, this UVB dose simultaneously abrogated all GVL activity mediated by the T cells in the graft, while the radio-protective capacity of rat BM cells was strongly reduced. The number of allogeneic BM cells required to protect lethally irradiated BN rats was increased 50 to 100-fold. It is concluded that UVB acts as a non-selective form of T cell inactivation, and that UVB pretreatment of an allogeneic marrow graft is unlikely to be useful clinically as a preventive measure for GVHD, since other means of reduction of the number of functional T cells are less damaging to bone marrow stem cells.

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We report a case study of a female who received an allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from a sex-mismatched related donor and who, after a twenty-year interval, developed an acute fulminant biopsy-proven demyelinating disorder of cerebral white matter which followed a remitting-relapsing chronic course. In situ hybridization studies using Y-chromosome-specific markers revealed Y-chromosome-positive mononuclear cells in biopsy samples of white matter. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies of the asymptomatic healthy male donor showed multiple white matter lesions. These observations suggest that donor lymphocytes were sensitized to central nervous system (CNS) antigens prior to or at the time of transplantation but remained dormant for 20 years before becoming activated to cause widespread demyelination.

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It is important to be able to assess the contribution of donor cells to the graft followmg bone marrow transplantation (BMT), as complete engraftment of marrow progenitors that can give rise to long term donor derived hemopoiesis may be important in long-term disease-free survival. The contribution of the donor marrow, both in terms of filling the marrow "space" created by the intense conditioning regimen and in its ability to mediate a graft versus leukemia effect may be assessed by studying the kinetics of the engraftment process. As BMT involves repopulation of the host hemopoietic system with donor cells, recipients of allogeneic marrow are referred to as hemopoietic chimeras. A donor chimera is an individual who exhibits complete donor hemopoiesis and we would imagine that donor chimertsm carries the best long-term prognosis. A patient who has both donor and recipient cells coexistmg in a stable fashion post-BMT without hematological evidence of relapse or graft rejection is referred to as a mixed chimera. Mixed chimerism may be a prelude to graft rejection or leukemic relapse; therefore, it is important to be able to monitor the presence of these cells in a precise manner.

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Donor hematopoiesis or donor chimerism in the host following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) has appeared crucial to the engraftment process. However, as molecular techniques exploiting neutral variation in human genetic material have been used in the study of chimerism, the detection of residual host cells or mixed hemopoietic chimerism has indicated that donor chimerism is not obligatory following BMT. This review focuses on the detection and significance of mixed chimerism (MC) in patients transplanted for both malignant and non-malignant hemopoietic disease and attempts to tease out the contribution of MC to engraftment, leukemia relapse, graft rejection and long-term disease-free survival.

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Human T lymphotrophic virus type 1 (HTLV-I) associated leukaemia has a poor prognosis even with chemotherapy. We describe a patient with adult T-cell leukaemia treated with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation from an HTLV-I negative identical sibling donor. During follow-up after bone marrow transplantation, HTLV-I could be repeatedly isolated inspite of anti-viral prophylaxis. The patient died of an acute encephalitis and HTLV-I could be detected in autopsy material from the brain. By a PCR-based technique using short tandem repeats (STRs) it was shown that the patient's haemopoiesis was of donor origin. This shows the infection of donor cells in vivo by an aetiological agent which has been implicated in the leukaemogenic process for adult T-cell leukaemia.

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Although allogeneic bone marrow transplantation has been shown to be a highly effective treatment for acute and chronic leukemia, leukemic relapse remains a significant problem. Leukemic relapse occurs in recipient cells in the majority of cases, but the paucity of donor cell leukemias may reflect the sensitivity of the investigative technique. We have developed a highly sensitive technique to identify the origin of all hematopoietic cells in the post transplant state which is based on PCR amplification of microsatellites, polymorphic tandem repetitive elements. We have identified donor leukemia (AML M5) following a sex matched BMT for severe aplastic anemia, verified a previously reported case of donor leukemia following BMT for chronic granulocytic leukemia and recently identified an acquired cytogenetic abnormality(del 11q23) in donor cells four years following an apparently successful BMT for AML. In all cases the donors have remained healthy. Postulated mechanisms include transfer to the transplanted marrow of a dormant oncogene residing in the DNA of either a virus, the chromosomes of degenerating irradiation damaged host leukemic cells or in the marrow stroma which is radioresistant and host in origin following BMT. Using sensitive techniques donor leukemia has been shown to be a more common event than was previously thought and an understanding of its pathogenesis may allow us to elucidate leukemogenic mechanisms in man.